This Dec. 19, 2017 photo shows water pooling in low spot on a homeowners lawn near Langley, Wash. The financial costs of poor drainage on properties can be substantial. Prevention is the cure. Low spots on the landscape can be hard to see but areas where the ground is wet for long periods of time after it rains or the sprinklers are run are locations where the water is collecting. (Dean Fosdick via AP)

This Dec. 7, 2017 photo shows how an extender attached to a rain gutter downspout is used to direct water away from a home near Langley, Wash. Rain gutters cause most of the common home drainage problems. Use extenders to channel the water away. Most water damage problems are caused by water pouring from rain gutters onto just one point where it can collect against foundations, flood landscapes and planter areas. (Dean Fosdick via AP)

Rain gutters cause many home drainage problems

Rain gutters cause many home drainage problems

By DEAN FOSDICK

Jan. 23, 2018

The person who coined the phrase "saving for a rainy day" must have been a property owner with home drainage problems.

The financial costs of poor drainage can be substantial, and the human health costs significant too.

Prevention is important, and many clues exist for predicting trouble, says Ryan Larsen, a civil engineer with NDS Inc., a manufacturer of drainage products in Woodland Hills, California.

"Low spots in the landscape can be hard to see, but areas where the ground is wet for long periods of time after it rains or the sprinklers run are locations where water is collecting," Larsen said.

Discoloration and mold growth on a home's foundation, and places where stucco, siding or paint easily fall off a house are indications that water is pooling, he said. "You should suspect water is getting into your home if you detect damp or musty smells in your basement or crawl space," he said.

Most homes have some kind of drainage problem, and most often the damage comes from rain gutters, Larsen said.

"Because a lot of homes have gutter downspouts that lead straight to the ground, you've got all this water coming off the roof and pouring to just one point, where it can collect against a home's foundation and flood landscapes and planter areas," he said. "Fortunately, gutter problems are also the easiest to fix with a downspout extender."

The financial costs of poor drainage can add up. Outlays for drying basements can range from $1,000 to $10,000, according the U.S. National Flood Insurance Program. Repairing foundation damage can cost anywhere from $3,500 to $25,000, the National Association of Realtors says.

The human health costs of poor drainage on properties also can be sizeable, Larsen said. "Poorly drained runoff from roofs can enter basements or flow inside homes through foundational cracks or leaks where it can warp floorboards and turn finished rooms into mildewy and moldy messes that can attract insects and rodents."

Inadequate drainage also cracks foundations, creates standing water that ruins yards and gardens, and allows breeding spots for disease-carrying mosquitoes and heartworms.

Three of the most common solutions for drainage problems are catch basins, pop-up emitters and French drains.

Catch basins trap sediment and contaminants beneath downspouts for drainage to safer locations. Pop-up emitters are connected to underground drainage pipes and channeled away from structures. The pop-up tops allow water to drain when full but remain closed when empty to keep out rodents and debris. French drains are gravel-filled trenches that direct storm water away from specific areas. They collect water over their entire length, rather than from one particular spot.

With water drainage problems, though, come opportunities, said Monica Day, a water resources educator with Michigan State University Extension.

"Be creative," Day said. "There are positive ways of dealing with too much water. Keep it in the soil but where it's not damaging anything. Let (ornamental) plants grow there to filter out the water and retain it.